De Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre
Ir a navegaciónSaltar a buscarApulia y Calabria ( latín : Apulia et Calabria ) era una provincia tardorromana en Apulia y Calabria en el sur de Italia . Su capital era Canusium (moderna Canosa di Puglia ).
Ver también
|
|
|
| | - Alpes Cottiae
- Flaminia et Picenum Annonarium
- Liguria et Aemilia
- Raetia I
- Raetia II
- Venetia et Histria
| - Africa proconsularis (Zeugitana)
- Byzacena
- Mauretania Caesariensis
- Mauretania Sitifensis
- Numidia (divided as Cirtensis and Militiana during the Tetrarchy)
- Tripolitania
|
|
|
|
|
- Dalmatia
- Noricum mediterraneum
- Noricum ripense
- Pannonia I
- Pannonia II
- Savia
- Valeria ripensis
| - Dacia Mediterranea
- Dacia Ripensis
- Dardania
- Moesia I
- Praevalitana
| - Achaea
- Creta
- Epirus Nova
- Epirus Vetus
- Macedonia Prima
- Macedonia II Salutaris
- Thessalia
|
| - Europa
- Haemimontus
- Moesia II4
- Rhodope
- Scythia4
- Thracia
| - Asia
- Caria4
- Hellespontus
- Islands4
- Lycaonia (370)
- Lycia
- Lydia
- Pamphylia
- Pisidia
- Phrygia Pacatiana
- Phrygia Salutaris
| - Armenia I5
- Armenia II5
- Armenia Maior5
- Armenian Satrapies5
- Armenia III (536)
- Armenia IV (536)
- Bithynia
- Cappadocia I5
- Cappadocia II5
- Galatia I5
- Galatia II Salutaris5
- Helenopontus5
- Honorias5
- Paphlagonia5
- Pontus Polemoniacus5
| - Arabia
- Cilicia I
- Cilicia II
- Cyprus4
- Euphratensis
- Isauria
- Mesopotamia
- Osroene
- Palaestina I
- Palaestina II
- Palaestina III Salutaris
- Phoenice I
- Phoenice II Libanensis
- Syria I
- Syria II Salutaris
- Theodorias (528)
| - Aegyptus I
- Aegyptus II
- Arcadia
- Augustamnica I
- Augustamnica II
- Libya Superior
- Libya Inferior
- Thebais Superior
- Thebais Inferior
|
|
|
|
|
- Taurica
- Quaestura exercitus (536)
- Spania (552)
|
|
- 1 Later the Septem Provinciae
- 2 Re-established after reconquest by the Eastern Empire in 534 as the separate Prefecture of Africa
- 3 Later the Diocese of Illyricum
- 4 Placed under the Quaestura exercitus in 536
- 5 Affected (i.e. boundaries modified, abolished or renamed) by Justinian I's administrative reorganization in 534–536
|